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Journal Article

Piston Ring Tribological Challenges on the Next Generation of Flex-fuel Engines

2010-05-05
2010-01-1529
With the current use of bio-renewable fuel, the application of Ethanol in Flex-Fuel vehicles presents a very low CO2 emission alternative when the complete cycle, from plantation, fuel production, till vehicle use, is considered. In Brazil more than 80% of the car production is composed of Flex-Fuel vehicles. Due to the lower heating content of the Ethanol, more aggressive combustion calibrations are used to obtain the same engine power than when burning gasoline. Such Ethanol demands, associated with the continuous increase of engine specific power has lead to thermo-mechanical loads which challenges the tribology of piston rings. The ethanol use brings also some specific tribological differences not very well understood like fuel dilution in the lube oil, especially on cold start, corrosive environment etc. Under specific driving conditions, incipient failures like spalling on nitrided steel top rings have been observed.
Technical Paper

Calculation of Piston Ring Radial Pressure Distribution from its Measured Free Shape

2012-04-16
2012-01-1322
Piston ring radial pressure effects both the manufacturability of the ring as well as its performance in the engine. While lack of radial contact can cause increased blow-by and lubricant oil consumption, high local contact pressure can cause excessive wear and even scuffing. Current methods to evaluate ring radial pressure fail to identify subtle, local pressure changes. To overcome such limitation, a new method to evaluate ring radial pressure at each peripheral angle was developed. In this experimental procedure, the ring free shape is recorded by an optical device and then this free shape is used as input to code that calculates its radial pressure distribution. In order to validate this method, six different sample variants of ring pressure distribution, (i.e. free shape), have their radial pressure evaluated by two different methods: 1,) the new procedure and 2,) a mechanical jig with 11 circumferentially spaced radial load sensors.
Technical Paper

Liner Honing Quality Main Characteristics

1992-11-01
921453
The cylinder bore honing quality is an essential factor for a good engine performance and durability. A bad surface finish can result in an excessive lubricant oil consumption, high piston ring wear and scuffing occurrence. In this paper the most important characteristics of bore honing for cast iron cylinders and their influence in the combustion engine performance are described and discussed. Despite its importance, the bore honing is commonly undervalued due to various reasons including the difficulty of a practical but sufficient method of quality qualifying. Some honing commonly misunderstood concepts are detailed and SEM photographs of bore surface from both good and bad finish are presented. At the end of this paper it is also presented a recommendation for a practical evaluation method of honing quality.
Technical Paper

Steel Piston Rings - A Solution with Lower Environmental Impact

1996-10-01
962318
This work compares the typical manufacturing process of cast iron piston rings with chromium or molybdenum coating with the more recent nitriding steel process. Environmental impact of the processes is estimated by their material losses, consumption of energy and hazardous waste. Despite all technological development, the nowadays production process of a typical piston ring still implies that the finished part has only 30% of the iron initially cast. A more recent design, nitrided steel piston ring, reduces substantially material losses during the part manufacturing. It also substitutes high polluter processes as chromium plating or metal spray for the lower polluter gas nitriding. Production of Nitrided Steel Rings (NSR) uses 40% less energy, needs 78% less raw material and produces almost 10 times less hazardous waste. NSR has significant lower environmental impact in comparison with the traditional Coated Iron Ring (CIR). NSR also has environmental advantages during use.
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